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Why are Thousands of Migratory Salmon dying early?

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife fisheries manager John North claims only 272,000 out of the more than 507,000 sockeye salmon have successfully made it between two dams along a stretch of the lower Columbia River have survived the journey. Unseasonably hot water temperatures have killed nearly 50% of the temperature-sensitive sockeye salmon migrating up the Columbia River through Oregon and Washington state, according a wildlife official.

“We’ve never had mortalities at this scale,” said North. And it is alarming. Hot air combined with relatively little snow melt led to a rise in water temperatures prompting fishing restrictions and efforts to save beleaguered fish, including trucking salmon to cooler waters.

The Columbia River hit 70 degrees Fahrenheit in mid-June, about a month earlier than usual, and the fish were not able to adjust, North said. Warm waters are at least partially to blame for more than 400,000 additional salmon deaths this year, hatchery officials say.

The die-off comes as U.S. West Coast states grapple with drought conditions and the Columbia is seeing the third-highest count of sockeye returning from the ocean to spawn since 1960, federal figures show.

The sockeye were counted between the lower Columbia’s Bonneville Dam and McNary Dam, about 150 miles upstream, en route to the Snake River tributary.

Snake River sockeye, which lay their eggs in lakes, in 1991 became the first salmon named to the U.S. Endangered Species List.

In 1992, just 15 sockeye were counted passing the Snake River’s Lower Granite Dam, and only one, nicknamed “Lonesome Larry” by officials, managed to survive the swim to Idaho’s Redfish Lake, where the species historically spawned, North and federal figures show. If you ask me, it should have been called ‘Lucky Larry’ instead!

Last year, 2,788 sockeye passed Lower Granite Dam, North said, in what some state, federal, and tribal leaders say is a sign that investment in habitat restoration and other fish-boosting efforts were paying off.

However, sockeye are particularly susceptible and sensitive to temperature fluctuations. Warm waters this year have also killed off hundreds of other fish and hundreds of thousands of hatchery-spawned salmon, said North. Only 363 have made it past Lower Granite Dam so far this year.

By contrast, North attributed the death of fewer than 2,000 wild Chinook salmon to warm rivers, out of about 109,000 that passed Bonneville Dam.

The sockeye “are not as hardy, and they don’t seem to want to pass upstream when water temperatures get too high,” North said.